thorgal, le 12 April 2016 - 10:49 PM, dit :
Djibouti: l'UA juge la presidentielle «credible»
malgre des irregularites
La mission presidee par l'ancien Premier ministre du Mali, Soumana Sako,
pointe toutefois une irregularite plus genante :
l'absence des proces-verbaux qui doivent rendre compte du depouillement bureau par bureau.
http://www.rfi.fr/af...e-irregularites

If one tosses a ball, natural he or she is expecting 2 equal parties to play, in Djibouti everybody knows that there is no democracy, Piggy has been doing the same thing over a decade with the help of western government, who supply the military machineries and bankroll his regime that he uses against his own people.
Of course, Piggy is an influential member A U exclusive clubs, starting from IGAD, in case T---gal is ignorant about the region, Ethiopia is not only the member of that organization, it also happens to be headquarter of AU organization. They have no option but deal the elements of higher level, so it’s expected for them to say "libre" et "credible"
In Europe, the social media were showing solidary with the victims of the alleged rape of Djiboutian military, the same military where instrument of ballot stuffing, it's the first group that Piggy celebrated with and showed his gratitude of what they have done for him.
Rather than cry foul play here and there, west should be calling an arms embargo to current regime or withhold the land lease payment to his illegitimate regime or both.
Citation
We are not Frenchy ---------------------
5. © Fathi said that at the military level Djiboutians were beginning to understand how the American system worked. He cited an example of military equipment that had been ordered in the year 2002 but which, it now appeared, would not arrive until 2005. USLO Major Anderson reminded Fathi that he, Fathi, had only signed the contract for this equipment three months ago. Fathi said, yes, now he was beginning to understand, and in general the Djiboutian military was beginning to get the picture. But President Guelleh was totally confused and completely troubled. Guelleh now told him that he understood nothing that had been reported by Ambassador Olhaye on the subject of U.S. assistance. Guelleh wanted to start all over. He wanted a clear, practical, down-to-earth, simple piece of paper that told him what Djibouti was going to get and when. The problem was, Fathi explained, that President Guelleh would begin next year his campaign for reelection in 2005. He needed already, now, to expedite payment of pensions and salaries, in preparation for that campaign. To do that he needed to know what money he was going to have in hand and when. When Guelleh had received the payment for the lease of Camp Lemonier, he had immediately used a portion of that cash to pay arrears of pensions and salaries. Djiboutians were now being paid promptly at the end of the month and knew to thank the United States.
6. © Charge said that he hoped to be seeing President Guelleh soon and would offer as good an explanation as he could. However, it was necessary to realize that the U.S. had a completely different system of providing assistance from France's. In the Charge's consultations in Paris the previous week, he had learned that France had promised Djibouti a total package of military and civilian expenditure in Djibouti of 55 million dollars annually; part of that package was an agreement that if the military component went down, the civilian component would go up in equal measure. It was a nice, clean system, but it bore no resemblance to the way the United States did business.
7. © Fathi said he did not ask the Americans to be French. Djibouti only asked for clarity. It did not need to know what assistance would cost the U.S. government (which, Charge pointed out, was what the U.S. government announces) but what Djibouti would receive. Fathi said that it would be preferable if the U.S. took out all expenses for overhead and administration that would reduce the net amount of assistance dollars realized in Djibouti, prior to giving Guelleh the monetary value of U.S. assistance. President Guelleh would be returning to Djibouti in a couple of days and he would need a firm list of what Djibouti would get, how much cash, how much in the way of projects, their value to Djibouti, and their execution dates.
8. © Fathi said that Djibouti had asked for nothing from the United States. It had gone through many lean years, and its nomadic populace could survive off of dates and water. It was the United States that had offered help, which was indeed desperately needed, and Djibouti just wanted to know what to expect. He realized that there was extremely good will on both sides, and that these were only the unavoidable problems of adaptation to each other's ways. ------- Comment -------
Ce message a été modifié par labo22 - 13 avril 2016 - 06:48 .